THE NEW YORKER passed second and just kept on run- ning George Kelly-oh, he had the best arm in baseball-saw hIm, dnd he fired the ball across to Frisch at third, and Frisch took the throw and tagged \Vard just as he slid In. I can still see that, with Ward in the dirt and Frank Fnsch making the tag and then land- Ing on his fanny, with the ball still in his glove. It was a double play and it ended it all, but it happened so fast that everybody in the stands just sat there for a minute. They couldn't believe the S . " enes was over. Stoneham talked in an energetic, good-humored way. He reminded me of a good standup, middle-of-the-night bar conversationalist. "I was in the stands that day. I was still in school, at Loyola School. I was a mediocre second baseman on the team there. I went to a lot of Giants games, of course. J immy Walker was a stdte as- semblyman then, and he used to corne to the game every day. I got to know him very well- Hey, look at thzs I" Von Joshua, the Giant center field- er-the 1975 Giant center fielder- had sIngled, and a run was coming across the plate. Within another min- ute or two, the Giants were ahead by 3-0, still in the first inning, and Mc- Intosh had been knocked out of the gam e. Stoneham resumed, but We were in 1939 now, at a famous Polo Grounds disaster that I had seen. "You were there? " Stoneham said. "Then, of course, you remember what happened. It was early in the summer, but that game cost us the pennant. ",\YO e were playing the Cincinnati Reds head and head, and if we win we have a good shot at first place. Then somehody hit that ball for them-maybe it was Har- ry Craft-that hooked foul in to the left-field upper deck, and the umpire called it fair and waved the runners around. Everybody could see it was foul, so there was a big squabble, and Billy J urges, our shortstop, he spit right In George Magerkurth's face, and Magerkurth swung on him. Well, they were both suspended, of course-the player and the umpire hoth together. We called up Frank Scalzi to take J urges's place, but a few days later Lou Chlozza and Joe Moore had a collision going after a fly ball and Chlozza got the broken leg, lnd we never did get . ." gOIng agaIn. I asked Stoneham about his first job with the GIants, and he told me that he had gone to work in the ticket depart- ment when he was in his early twenties. "We had a lady, Miss \Vilson, who ran it all then," he said. "None of this 101 Hi ass ca ures e momen Two thoroughbreds from Bill Blass for PBM Vested suits in mix and match solids and checks of pure cinnamon, a very spirited new color for Fall Available in your area but zf you have difficulty it may be worth a tnp to Silvenvood $, Los Angeles IU l r M Pincus Brothers Maxwell, Independence Mall East, PhlladelphlO (215) WA 2-4900 Bill Blass for PBM, 743 Fifth Avenue, New York (212) 753 3606 A' .,. .:. . ., ..... '" : -c. : r-4 . . .. ".-' .;: ."''@ , . . ... .. f :: é', . f ,.. ... ". "'1.-'\ -t ....:, : ". ..\ - , ,. j. .. , ,..ff("' .. .' , . ,J ..-r .... ....-.. ." .. . < . s:. ...., 4 4:' \ 4 ' '.. t, .;..... , , " :-" " ;., , 1i\fi!I '< , ".,. ..:.. ,.. [ J . ., -#' - /, j-, 1Þ ;, 'Y ntÙl; IOlTNT AJ'f RED WlffE _ LlGHT fm'R(;UNDY f' :ç-I; :M :JtM. h.í3: :tJt M:: \ LOtlS ),I., MARTINI ;s:t f .6 . :r.:.4 't .;:,;; . r ;,;: 'ß_ " A premium premium wine in a "Jug"? Not one for fancy bottles, Louis M. Martini always said: "I'd rather put any extra costs IN the bottle, there rests my best salesman!'" THAT'S WHY' SOLE U S DISTRIBUTOR. PARROTT & CO · SAN FRANCISCO